Hades wrote:
On the comparisons, Batman, like Dragonball has been a popular cartoon, yet the former dealt with more mature subjects like crime and justice. Vegeta did come from a society where Andrei Chikatilo was the norm, and he settles down on Earth with the girlfriend of one of his victims, which does make him a Karma Houdini, which isn't helped by poor writing. Finally, the Roshi/Savile comparison is appropriate to an extent, as in both cases, people just ignored what they actually did, with very similar rationale. I suppose it's just the savile scandal that has made me feel creeped out by Roshi. As for the comparison to racial attitudes in 40s/50s cartoons, Mr Popo does resemble racist caricatures, so there's that. However, my point was that just because it's a cartoon, that doesn't mean it can't be critiqued.
Batman was definitely known and praised for its more mature themes, but that's what they were going for. When the show was made, they wanted it to have that darker feel. And again, you can't compare Vegeta and the Saiyans to the acts of Chikatilo, a real-life murderer...even though they may both
technically be murderers. Swiper from
Dora The Explorer and Jesse James are both thieves, but you don't see people lobbying for the former to get an in-show punishment...or at least not one similar to real life.
Roshi was hardly ever ignored, though. He often got smacked, hit, or hurt when he tried to be perverse.
A cartoon can definitely be critiqued, but they shouldn't all be critiqued with the same standards. Some Cartoons can be critiqued like a live-action work, some live-action works can be critiqued like a cartoon...Heck, I'm personally against categorizing them like that anyway. Just because something is animated, doesn't mean it shouldn't be lumped in with things that aren't, and vice-versa. There are various standards that things set out to reach, and should be judged by. I'm not gonna read the
Oreimo light novels in the same way that I would read
The Fountainhead or
Brave New World. Or judge Archie's
Sonic comics in the same vein as
Watchmen.